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oli_chose123 said:
What I meant by my post was that self-awarness my not exactly be an existing quality....
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The thing is, self-awareness isn't a wishy-washy concept that can mean different things to different people. It's a well-defined quality with well-defined methods for testing for it. There seems to be a train of thought out there that thinks that because self-awareness is some mysterious thing that you can't actually see, but only observe the effects of, that means they can tinker with the definition to suit their particular viewpoint. Which is absurdity, really. You don't often hear people saying, "Well what gravity means to me is..."
Last I checked, the only animals that had just shown evidence of self-awareness (not proven, but evidence points in that direction), are apes, dolphins and, oddly, elephants.
Regardless, the uses for a self-aware machine would be extremely limited. Sure, they could process information at an incredible rate, but they don't need to be self-aware to do that. Running simulations would be best left to non-self aware computers, because they will always be faster, by virtue of not having to deal with the phenomenal overhead of simply being self-aware. Same goes for designing games. We already have programs that can write other programs, and they will always get the work done faster using a computer that isn't using so much horsepower maintaining it's consciousness. And then you'd have to figure out how to program creativity, since that is not a unique characteristic of self-awareness, given how many startlingly uncreative people there are on the planet.
I'm not saying it's a bad idea and not worth pursuing, I'd love to see it in my lifetime, I'm just saying, it's application is limited. As much as I'd like to one day have a conversation with a self-aware machine, the fact remains that there really isn't much practical use for them.
Oh, and I do despise the "humans are just natural computers/organic machines/living CPUs, etc." Humans fall into the broad category of organisms, because we're alive. Machines and computers, by definition, aren't.